Showing posts with label Penguin Crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penguin Crime. Show all posts

Friday, 25 July 2025

Talking with Whyte Python’s author Travis Kennedy

 

Very rarely have I enjoyed reading a debut novel [that contained such an absurd plot] as I did last week with The Whyte Python World Tour by Travis Kennedy.

It kept me reading with my hands glued to the cover as if my life depended upon reaching the end.

It provoked thought and reflection, while it constantly made me smile and at several points - laugh out loud. It also made my eyes moist as I considered [and contextualised] my own life.

In a crazy world that depresses me and fills me with anxiety whenever I view the TV News – The Whyte Python World Tour – became an antidote as it made me feel good – it put a big smile on my face as it held me in its grip.

Without going totally hyperbolic – this debut novel was / is life-affirming.

I was first made aware of this extraordinary debut by Publisher Rowland White during the Michael Joseph Crime Party, held in February [Crypt at St Martins-in-the-Fields Trafalgar Square in London].

This year [2025] marks the 90th anniversary of the formation of Penguin Publishing.

Michael Joseph was a bestselling author before he turned publisher in 1935 – the same year Penguin paperbacks were launched. In 1985, exactly half a century after their mutual founding, Michael Joseph became the commercial imprint of Penguin Books. And now, it forms an important part of the PenguinRandomHouse Global Publishing Conglomerate.

Read More HERE

So what is The Whyte Python World Tour all about?

Set in the late 1980s, the author weaves the collapse of the Soviet Bloc into the era of peak heavy metal with the rise of a fictitious Los Angeles rock band Whyte Python. The band consists of four weird misfits - on Vocals Davy Bones (aka Lawrence Barkly), on Bass Guitar Spencer Dooley, on Lead Guitar (Robert) Buck Sweet and finally on Drums Richard Henderson aka Rikki Thunder.

Whyte Python is managed by the wimpy British producer Kirby Smoot for Andromeda Records and unbeknownst to the band, manipulated by the American Central Intelligence Agency’s Asian Intelligence Division [AID].

It appears that the Deputy Director of the CIA Ed Lonsa is reluctantly tasked to orchestrate a Cold War Psychological Operation against the Soviet Bloc. The Psy-Ops entitled Operation Facemelt is born, peopled by agents undergoing ‘disciplinary process’ though only three of them are aware that they are in this process. Firstly we have Amanda Price [aka Shawna Peppers] who works under the identity of rock and roll journalist Tawny Spice who is tasked with manipulating Drummer Rikki Thunders [from his band Qyksand] into joining Whyte Python. The other CIA agents being the insubordinates Catherine Stryker and Daryl Boone with the more conformist Bradford Mancuso.

As a thriller it is outstanding.

When I put the book down, I sat in silent contemplation and then downloaded the audio book narrated by Wil Wheaton as I wanted to revisit this crazy world again.

Read More HERE

After I put the book down, I had a few questions for the author Travis Kennedy, who kindly agreed to answer my queries.

I smiled during our dialogue, because it was little surprise to discover that I share the author’s enthusiasm for reading, including a passion for the works of Dennis Lehane - which I was unaware of when I read the book – and which may help [in part] to explain my own admiration for Travis Kennedy’s writing ability.

Ali: Welcome to Great Britain’s Shots Magazine.

Travis: Thank you for having me!

AK: We’re excited to introduce you to our readers, as this novel took over my life for two days as I read it over two sittings – is this really your first published work?

TK: Well, yes and no. It’s my first traditionally published novel, but I’ve had several short stories placed over the last dozen years or so - and I have been writing for my whole life. For many years, my career in public service demanded all of my creative energy, and I had to take a break from writing for myself. I was able to find my way back about twelve years ago, beginning with short stories and humour pieces. Believe it or not, this is chronologically the third complete novel that I have written.  My team made a decision to lead with THE WHYTE PYTHON WORLD TOUR, in part because of the speed of development on the film adaptation - but you will see the others!

AK: From your acknowledgements I see you come from a family that values books, libraries and reading. So would you care to tell us a little about your childhood and your reading?

TK: Oh, absolutely. Reading has been coded deeply into my personality since I was four years old. It’s the hobby that I love to do most. It makes my brain happy! My parents recognized this trait in me very early – especially my father, who I inherited it from. When I was very young, my family lived on a lake in New Hampshire. In many pictures from that era, you can see my parents and brothers playing in the water while I’m off in the distance, happily sitting under a tree with my nose in a book. When I was six years old, we moved to southern Maine, just outside of the City of Portland; and that first week, before all of the bags were unpacked, my father brought me to the Portland Public Library and signed me up for a library card. “There,” he said. “You’re home.”

What’s remarkable to me now as a dad myself is seeing the same quality in my own kids. My daughter is nine years old as I write this, and she is just like me. She reads relentlessly. Her school backpack is very heavy, because she never has fewer than two novels stuffed in between her lunchbox and schoolwork. Needless to say, she is delighted that her dad works in the publishing business now. She travels with me to book stores when I go in to sign stock, and she keeps a record of each store and what she found special about it. My son is six, and so he’s less impressed by Dad’s new line of work; it’s not strange or exciting to him at all, it's just what I do for a living. But reading came to him even more naturally than it did for me. Our house is absolutely littered with books.

AK: And of that time can you tell us which novels / stories were you favourites and why?

TK: I was an absolute book vacuum. I loved books across all genres, and had countless favourites. But I gravitated the strongest toward storytelling that put kids in the middle of adventures with genuine stakes. I probably loved Roald Dahl’s books the most. I read CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY at least a dozen times throughout my childhood – in one instance, three times in a row. There’s a real ominous feeling in his work, that the little heroes actually might not make it out okay. I loved the film The Goonies for the same reason. Stories that took their child heroes seriously.

AK:….But what books was/were the one[s] that made you want to pick up a pen / pc and write yourself?

TK: Jumping ahead to the modern era: think the two biggest inspirations for me as an adult to really GO FOR IT and dedicate myself to writing were Elmore Leonard and Dennis Lehane. When reading Elmore, you always get the feeling that he was smiling on the other side of his typewriter. There’s so much charm to his work, a sense that he’s enjoying himself. Elmore made it clear to me that you’re allowed to have fun with writing, and to let that sense of fun and joy in the exercise make its way onto the page. And then I picked up A DRINK BEFORE THE WAR by Dennis Lehane, and that voice just grabbed me with both hands in the first chapter and wouldn’t let me go. He was rewriting my own inner monologue in Patrick Kenzie’s sly Boston accent. I had to try to do that, too. I got such joy from reading both of those writers’ work, and I felt a kinship with them in how my own mind likes to tell stories, and together they pushed me into going for it.

AK: Who do you read now days?

TK: I’m still a vacuum! I still bounce around from genre to genre, fiction to non-fiction and back. I love great crime thrillers that break the standard mold. Every Michael Koryta book is a must-read for me. There’s a great writer who is also from Maine named Ron Currie Jr, who wrote an amazing crime fiction book called THE SAVAGE, NOBLE DEATH OF BABS DIONNE that has that grand, operatic feeling of Dennis Lehane and Don Winslow’s work. But I read everything. On the other end of the spectrum, I loved ATMOSPHERE by Taylor Jenkins Reid. John Scalzi’s WHEN THE MOON HITS YOUR EYE. Chris Whitaker, Fredrik Backman, Benjamin Stevenson, Richard Osman, Stephen King. I love Percival Everett. The book about Lorne Michaels was great.

AK: So onto The Whyte Python World Tour…..the central premise is what could be described as ‘Cherry’ - the CIA using a Heavy Metal band in the 1980s to influence disaffected East Europeans fed of Soviet Oppression…where did this weird idea come from?

TK:   Good question! I’ve had a longtime fascination with that specific era of music called “glam metal,” the party-themed rock anthems played by so-called “hair bands” of the 1980s. I was just a kid when they were on top of the world, and so they were really comical in my eyes. Like feral real-life muppets, wearing leather and spandex with makeup and wild hair and singing these infectious, harmless anthems. About twenty years ago, I started to read autobiographies of some of the big stars from that time – Slash, Motley Crue, Poison, etc – and I discovered that more often than not, the rock Gods on stage often came from challenging childhoods and were misfits until they found each other through music. They were overlooked and underappreciated, and then playing in these bands unlocked their superpowers. It seemed like there was a fun story in that; the idea that they had these secret identities that you only saw when the stage lights came on.

Then five years ago, I listened to a podcast called “Wind of Change,” produced by the very talented investigative reporter Patrick Radden Keefe. He was chasing a pervasive rumour that the CIA wrote the song “Wind of Change” for the hit German metal band The Scorpions, as a psyop to usher the Eastern Bloc’s youth into democracy at the end of the Cold War through the power of soft metal. He couldn’t prove it, of course; and I suspect that it isn’t true. But the concept married perfectly with the theme I had been chewing on, on and off, for almost twenty years about the glam metal guys having secret powers. This was it! And as a fiction story, divorced from any responsibility to tell the truth, I could make it whatever I wanted. 

AK: And so did you plot extensively or run with the idea until you had a narrative that could be licked into shape? And end-to-end how long did it take to physically write the novel?

TK: Before I wrote a word, I wrestled with the idea of how to tell the story. I wanted it to be a first-person narrative, like you’re reading a rockstar’s autobiography; but I also wanted the readers to understand pretty quickly what was going on, unbeknownst to our hero, Rikki Thunder. I didn’t really let myself think about the arc of the story until I figured out how to tell it, which took a little time. Once the solution came to me that the correct way to write this book is to break all narrative rules – it can be first person sometimes, and third person sometimes, and occasionally told through music montage – the book poured out of me as fast as I could keep up with it. Because breaking all the rules is metal! The unique format didn’t just allow me to tell the story how I wanted to tell it; it made it FEEL more like a frenzied, rule-breaking hair band video. The first draft took about three months. But that being said, I’ve worked more on this book than anything I’ve done in my life. There were, easily, twenty rounds of revisions; the first several by me alone, then a bunch with my agent and more again with my editor at Doubleday. So, while the first draft happened fast, the book took a little over two years to truly complete.

AK: I consider a major strength in the narrative are the [very] minor characters, who you define so very deftly, but yet they sit up straight on the page, such as Bass Guitarist Spencer Dooley’s [possibly] imaginary friend ‘Kevin’ or the East Berlin shopkeeper Josef Weidermann, or the Plumber Ben Pratt and Rikki’s old school friend Ron……less is more….would you care to comment?

TK: First, thank you! That compliment means a lot to me, because there is definitely some risk in introducing a large cast of characters in a novel and asking your readership to try to keep them all arranged in their minds. I’m glad to hear it worked for you. I think if you’re going to create a character, you owe it to them to make them unique and feel lived-in, and cared about. I think the old writing adage of “show, don’t tell” is CRITICAL when you’re creating minor characters who still need to feel real; we don’t need to know everything about Ron and his personal backstory, but we feel like we know it anyway only because of how he looks and dresses and moves. Same with Ben Pratt; the minor details (clean shirt, soft voice, big, pawlike hands) tell us he’s a gentle giant, and give us the warm feelings toward him that Rikki feels and remembers. That should be enough for the reader to get an imprint without feeling smothered by description about someone they’re not going to spend much time with, especially because I’m going to ask you to keep track of a lot of supporting characters more thoroughly.

AK: Are you a follower of Heavy Metal yourself? And if so, which bands do you rate form that genre?

TK: I am – but not at all exclusively. Music is very much like books to me – I love it if it’s done well, and spend time in whatever genre that matches my mood. I’ve mellowed quite a bit in my 40s now, but writing the book has been a really fun exercise in reconnecting with these musical roots from my youth! The fun thing about “metal” or “glam metal” or “hair bands” is that they’re all such flexible terms, and a lot of music aficionados love to fight over your exact question:

what qualifies? Because Poison is so different from Guns N’ Roses, which is so different from Van Halen or Motley Crue, or Def Leppard, or Iron Maiden, or Motorhead or Metallica or Bon Jovi and so on. Fans of all of that music – which is an enormous spectrum of sound – love to fight over this. I think that when we think of the era, we qualify bands with these titles (metal, glam, hair, etc) based on the look and the attitude, more than the melodies and the themes. We see massive hair, defying gravity thanks to cans of Aquanet; and ripped jeans, and spandex, and makeup, and we say “that’s metal.” It’s a time and a place and a vibe, more than a uniform style of music.

AK: So what’s next for Travis Kennedy?

TK: Lots! I’m plotting out a new novel now – it’s not in the world of Whyte Python, but I have a strong feeling that those muppets will be back eventually. I’m also supporting the work of the film adaptation of the book, and I have a few other film projects in various stages of development. I’m incredibly fortunate to be able to write full-time now, and it feels like I finally have time for all of the ideas that have been scrambling over each other to get to the front of the line. It’s a very exciting time!

AK: Thank you your time and insight.

TK: Truly, it’s my pleasure. Thanks for reading!

Shots Magazine would like to thank Publisher and Senior Editor Rowland White and from Publicity Lily Evans at Michael Joseph imprint of PenguinRandomHouse UK

For more information > https://whytepython.com/ and https://traviskennedy.com/

Promotional Photos / Images are © Brian Fitzgerald / Fitzgerald Photo / Travis Kennedy / PenguinRandomHouse / Little Brown Publishing / Ali Karim / Audible

Wednesday, 6 September 2023

Penguin Classic Crime & Espionage -- 2nd tranche coming soon!

Reviving the iconic green Penguin Crime paperbacks, first published 75 years ago, this new series celebrates the endless variety and unique appeal of one of fiction’s great genres. The series, which continues to grow, is a careful selection of the very best from Penguin Classics’ extensive archives, combined with new discoveries unearthed from the golden age of crime and well overdue a new readership. The first tranche of titles, released in Summer 2023, took us from a sunshine soaked, yet bullet ridden California to a macabre Tokyo flat. Now the second tranche is here to take us through to Autumn with the best fireside reading for armchair detectives.

The series is carefully curated by author and Penguin Press publishing director Simon Winder, who is available for publicity: “These books are united by atmosphere, anxiety, a strong sense of time and place, and an often-appalling ingenuity, both on behalf of the authors and their characters. They have also all aged very well, gaining an additional pleasure from shifts in manners, clothes, wisecracks, politics, murder weapons and potential alibis.”

‘I needed a drink, I needed a lot of life insurance, I needed a vacation, I needed a home in the country. What I had was a coat, a hat and a gun. I put them on and went out of the room’

Farewell, My Lovely by Raymond Chandler

The Big Sleep & Farewell, My Lovely | Raymond Chandler | 1939 & 1940

There are no streets meaner than those of L.A.'s underworld - but luckily one detective has more than his fair share of street smarts. Here, in the first two novels featuring the immortal creation Philip Marlowe, we see the cynical sleuth taking on a nasty case of blackmail involving a Californian millionaire and his two devil-may-care daughters; then dealing with a missing nightclub crooner (plus several gangsters with a habit of shooting first and talking later).

Raymond Chandler was born in Chicago in 1888 but moved to England with his family when he was twelve. During the Depression era, he seriously turned his hand to writing, and his first published story appeared in the pulp magazine Black Mask in 1933, followed six years later by his first novel, The Big Sleep

Game Without Rules | Michael Gilbert | 1967

In a peaceful Kent village, Mr Behrens lives with his aunt at the Old Rectory, where he plays chess and keeps bees. His friend Mr Calder lives nearby with Rasselas, a golden deerhound of unnatural intelligence. No one would suspect that they are in fact working for British Intelligence, carrying out the jobs that are too dangerous for anyone else to handle - whether it's wiping out traitors, Soviet spies or old Nazis - in these gloriously entertaining stories.

Michael Gilbert was born in Lincolnshire in 1912. He worked as a lawyer and wrote his novels exclusively when commuting by train, 500 words a day in 50-minute stints. He was made a CBE in 1980, awarded a Diamond Dagger for the Crime Writers Association for lifetime achievement, and named a 'grandmaster' by the Mystery Writers of America in 1988. 

Maigret’s Revolver | Georges Simenon | 1952

Inspector Maigret receives a call from his wife to say he has a visitor at their apartment. But when he gets home, the young man has already gone, along with Maigret's prized Smith and Wesson .45. The trail to find the culprit - and the woman who may become his victim - takes Maigret across Paris and all the way to the Savoy Hotel in London. But getting to the truth may be even more complicated than he had first imagined.

Georges Simenon was born in Liège, Belgium, in 1903. He is best known in Britain as the author of the Maigret novels and his prolific output of over 400 novels and short stories have made him a household name in continental Europe. He died in 1989 in Lausanne, Switzerland, where he had lived for the latter part of his life.

Sleeping Dog | Dick Lochte | 1985

Leo Bloodworth, 'the Bloodhound', is a world-weary L.A. gumshoe with a reputation for finding anything - and a low tolerance of precocious teenagers. Serendipity Dahlquist is a precocious teenager. When the headstrong, roller-skating fourteen-year-old asks Bloodworth to help track down her lost dog Groucho, it leads this oddest of odd couples into the dark criminal underworld of the Mexican mafia, and into more trouble than they'd bargained for.

Dick Lochte's first novel, Sleeping Dog was published to enormous acclaim. He was a columnist for the Los Angeles Times for several decades, and formerly president of both the American Crime Writers League and the Private Eye Writers of America. Born in New Orleans, Lochte now lives on the West Coast.

Brat Farrar | Josephine Tey | 1949

Twenty-one-year-old Brat Farrar is an orphan, alone in the world without friends or family. So when he is offered the unexpected chance to impersonate Patrick Ashby, the long-lost heir to a vast fortune on a country estate, he agrees. Brat is the spitting image of Patrick, who disappeared years ago. At first it seems Brat can pull off this incredible deception, until he starts to realise that he is in far greater peril than he ever imagined.

Josephine Tey began to write full-time after the successful publication of her first novel, The Man in the Queue (1929), which introduced Inspector Grant of Scotland Yard. It wasn't until after the Second World War that the majority of her crime novels were published. Born in Inverness, Tey died in 1952, leaving her entire estate to the National Trust.

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy | John le Carré | 1974

George Smiley, formerly of the Secret Intelligence Service, is contemplating his new life in retirement when he is called back on an unexpected mission. His task is to hunt down an agent implanted by Moscow Central at the very heart of the Circus - one who has been buried deep there for years. The dogged, troubled Smiley can discount nobody from being the traitor, even if it is one of those closest to him.

John le Carré was born in 1931. For six decades, he wrote novels that came to define our age. After a peripatetic childhood, a spell of teaching at Eton led him to a short career in British Intelligence (MI5&6), during which he published his first novel. He gained a worldwide reputation for his subsequent books. Le Carré died in December 2020. 

The Black Lizard | Edogawa Rampo | 1934

They call her the 'Dark Angel'. Queen of Tokyo's underworld, Mme Midorikawa is famed for her beauty, her jewels and the tattoo of a black lizard on her arm. Crime is so easy for her that she warns her victims in advance. When a wealthy jewel merchant receives letters saying his precious daughter Sanae is about to be kidnapped, he entrusts the renowned detective Akechi Kogoro to protect her. But he may have met his deadliest adversary yet...

Edogawa Rampo was the pseudonym of Taro Hirai, generally viewed as the greatest of all Japanese suspense and mystery authors. He was a prolific novelist and short story writer. Much influenced by writers such as Conan Doyle, Chesterton and Wells, his pseudonym is a Japanese transliteration of Edgar Allen Poe's name. Many of his works have been made into films. 

Payment Deferred | C.S. Forester | 1940

Bank clerk William Marble is facing financial ruin - until a visit from a wealthy young relative, a bottle of Cyanide and a shovel offer him an unexpected solution. But there is no such thing as the perfect murder. Gradually Marble becomes poisoned by guilt and fear, and his entire family corrupted. Sooner or later his deed will catch up with him, as events spiral out of control in the most unpredictable of ways...

C. S. Forester was born in 1899 in Cairo, where his father was a government official. On the outbreak of the Second World War, he entered the Ministry of Information. As well as the famous Horatio Hornblower series, his novels include The African Queen, adapted into the famous film, and crime novels Plain Murder and The Pursued.

The Mask of Dimitrios | Eric Ambler | 1939

English writer Charles Latimer is travelling in Istanbul when a police inspector tells him about the infamous master criminal Dimitrios, long wanted by the law, whose body has just been fished out of the Bosphorus. Immediately fascinated, Latimer decides to retrace Dimitrios' steps across Europe to gather material for a new book, but instead finds himself descending into a terrifying underworld of international espionage, Balkan drug dealers, unscrupulous businessmen and fatal treachery - one he may not be able to escape.

Eric Ambler was born in London. He studied engineering but left college and became a copywriter in the advertising industry, before publishing his great spy thrillers and working as a screenwriter. His profound influence on the espionage genre has been acknowledged by writers including Ian Fleming and John le Carré.

Other Paths to Glory | Anthony Price | 1974

Paul Mitchell is a young military historian whose life is changed forever when two men, Dr Audley and Colonel Butler of the MOD, visit him with a fragment of a German trench map - and a lot of questions. Then somebody tries to kill him. Paul, his life now in danger, agrees to go underground on a mission to solve a dangerous mystery: what really happened during the battle of the Somme in 1916? And why does somebody want to keep it secret?

Anthony Price was born in Hertfordshire. He began as a crime reviewer on the Oxford Mail and ending as editor of the Oxford Times. He won the Crime Writers' Association Silver Dagger for his first novel The Labyrinth Makers, and the Gold Dagger for Other Paths to Glory, which was later shortlisted for the Dagger of Daggers Award for the best crime novel of the last 50 years.